Friday, July 30, 2010

I bought an iPad in early May. This post is a summary of my thoughts when i first got it, up till now, 3 months later

Opening Thoughts and The First Month

First off - you really need to use an iPad to appreciate their coolness. They are incredibly slick.

I found immediately after getting an iPad that I almost never needed to turn on my desktop at home. I also didn't really need to turn on my laptop for much. It satisfies most browsing, email, RSS, and other media needs. The battery life is incredible, especially for watching video. You can read books from iTunes, Kindle, and Nook stores. There are lots of fun games for it. It's a great web browser.

It has really changed how I consume media. Let's not forget it also does Comic books - although selection is still not excellent, I have enjoyed one or two series that way.

The iPad is a device I use every day, but there are a couple of clear annoyances popping up.

The iPad needs the iOS 4 update BADLY. It feels like it's a second class citizen now that the iPhone 4 is out and has iOS 4 and multitasking. Apple really better have some extra features up their sleeve, or the wait just is not justified (and is crummy for early adopters)

It needs flash. As much as I dislike flash, I still hit websites that require it - some sites even have videos, half of which are HTML5, the other half of which appear to be flash and won't play. This is an issue for both Apple and Adobe to sort out. Adobe because I still don't think they (although as I write this, Froyo is finally out on some phones potentially) have a good, working flash implementation out on smartphones. Also - where's Linux flash support these days? 64-bit anyone? You can't claim it "just works" when basic platforms have had problems for YEARS. Also,

Summary

The iPad is an amazing device. Considering it is not only a first generation device, but also the first of its class - a true tablet with great battery life for browsing, reading, and watching video, I am definitely impressed. It isn't perfect - but iOS 4 should remedy my biggest issue, and it can't come out soon enough. Being able to multi task on my phone but not my iPad just isn't right - it should have launched with it. My hope is that printer support and/or a more sophisticated multitasking are coming. Time will tell...

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Yesterday my Opera browser at work auto-updated to 10.60. Opera's auto update is finally coming in line with Firefox...still not quite as nice, but it's getting there. More interesting was the dev blog about 10.60, and I saw elsewhere that Firefox 4.0 beta 1 was out, and also checked up on IE9 to see how things were progressing. Somewhere along the way, I also found the Peacekeeper benchmark and decided I wanted to benchmark some browsers to see what the current state-of-play is. I will be using that for overall (HTML5 / DOM / Javascript) performance, and Sunspider for pure Javascript performance. I'm also throwing ACID3 in there for a sense of where each browser is standards-wise.

Chrome has the lead on pure Javascript performance with its V8 Javascript engine, but Opera is not far behind. It's only trailing by 3.3%, barely more than the margin of error. Next up is Safari, taking 22% longer. IE9 Preview is showing great promise, at 31% behind Chrome.

Firefox 4 beta is not in the same ballpark currently, at just more than half the speed of Chrome. It is a good increase over Firefox 3.6.6, which would've been almost a 3x difference, but it is a ways off. The big takeaway is that the IE9 team appears to now be ahead of the Firefox 4 team on Javascript performance...times are certainly changing.

IE8 is included as a baseline, and because a lot of users are still on IE.

Next up is Peacekeeper, for this I have screenshots and the full results here.

Opera 10.60 leads here overall. Chrome is close, at 16% lower score. It's worth noting just how far ahead Chrome and Opera are over every other browser in the overall category. Safari 5 is next, at less than half the score. Firefox 4b1 is on the heels of Safari, and then there are the rest.

What's interesting to note here is that even though Safari & Chrome are both webkit based browsers, clearly the Chrome team is going the extra mile on performance.

I want to drill into what makes up these scores, as this benchmark is new to me, but I think that will be in a follow-up post as this post is already almost a week late if you look at the date..

Finally, lets look at ACID 3.

Chrome 5.0.375.99 - 100/100

Opera 10.60 - 100/100

Safari 5 - 100/100

Firefox 4 Beta 1 - 97/100

Firefox 3.6.6 - 94/100

IE 9 Preview 3 - 83/100

IE8 20/100 (FAIL)

Chrome, Opera, and Safari all receive full marks. I did not compare pixel to pixel, but they have had good track records with ACID tests. Firefox 4 Beta 1 is getting close to passing, slightly better than Firefox 3.6.6. IE9 has come a long way from IE8 but still has a ways to go in order to pass ACID 3.

Regardless of your preferred browser, there is some intense competition now in Javascript engines and general rendering performance, resulting in the experience improving for everyone. It is an exciting time, and I don't think you can go wrong with Chrome, Firefox, Opera, or Safari. Rendering and performance are more than good enough in all of them, so it comes down to other usability / features. Once IE9 is closer to final, I may even be able to recommend that.